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Renewable Heat Incentive

What is the Renewable Heat Incentive?

The Renewable Heat Incentive (RHI) is a fixed payment for the renewable heat you generate yourself.

The Renewable Heat Incentive (RHI) is a UK Government scheme set up to encourage uptake of renewable heat technologies among householders, communities and businesses through the provision of financial incentives. The UK Government expects the RHI to make a significant contribution towards their 2020 ambition of having 12 per cent of heating coming from renewable sources. The Renewable Heat Incentive is the first of its kind in the world

The Renewable Heat Incentive is similar to the Feed-in Tariffs, a comparable scheme for electricity which went live in April 2010.

While the Renewable Heat Incentive is similar to the Feed-In Tariffs, there are some important differences, and in particular:

It will be paid for by the Treasury not by energy users.

There is no ‘National Grid for Heat’ and so importing and exporting heat is not relevant.

It will be introduced in phases, with residential schemes not eligible until Phase 2.

There are three steps to the RHI:

Step Three: you get paid a fixed amount based on that output, the type of technology and the size of the system

Who is it for?

Broadly speaking, the Renewable Heat Incentive is for everyone, including households, landlords, businesses, farmers, schools, hospitals, care homes and more. The RHI can even be used by entire communities, coming together to invest in a renewable scheme from which they will all use the heat and share the income.